Ye-mok Jeon (Author)
Young-jeon Shin (Author)
The liberation period in Korea was when creative imagination and various debates existed about plans for political, economic, and social systems. Among them was the debate over the national health security underlying the social safety net. Although the US influenced the Korean health security after liberation, major political groups on the Korean peninsula also expressed various opinions. However, previous studies have shown little interest in national health security, which operates the public health and medical care systems. To overcome these limitations, this study focuses on the ideas on national health security presented by major political groups, analyzing the reply proposal of “Jŏnpyŏng” and the health care proposal of the US military government, which has not been reviewed before. The opinions of major political groups including the right-wing Im-hyŏp and left-wing Min-chŏn diverged on national health security issue regarding insurance coverage, measures to secure financial resources, items of insurance benefits, and measures to stabilize the supply and demand of medical personnel. The claims of the US military government can be understood by “Labor Problems and Policies in Korea (Korean Subcommittee),” “Korean Labor Report (Stewart Meacham),” and “Proposed Political Platform Provisional Korean Democratic Government (Sub-commission #2).” The major political groups and the US military government agreed on the need for social protection against death, old age, disability, disease, injury, and unemployment. All of them claimed national health security, in which the roles of the private sector and the government were mixed, should be gradually introduced. The major political groups, in particular, proposed to (1) set workers as beneficiaries of insurance, (2) share financial resources jointly among the state, employers, and workers, and (3) promote the expansion of the number of doctors and medical institutions and prefer cooperative operations of the hospitals established in small administrative units. This paper argues that the ideas on national health security during the liberation period did not completely deviate from the global trend immediately after World War II when countries tried to expand the number of people covered by national health security and strengthen its coverage. Although these ideas were not fully reflected in the Constitution of 1948, it is significant in that the Constitution codified for the first time the state’s responsibility for those who have no ability for living due to their health conditions.
...More
Article
Oh Young Kwon;
(2019)
Public Health Center on Tuberculosis Management in Korea: From 1945 to the Late 1970s
(/isis/citation/CBB710935059/)
Article
Shin, Y. J.;
Kim, J.;
(2014)
The Life of Choe Ung-Sok: With a Focus on His Design for and Role in the Health Care System Immediately after the Liberation
(/isis/citation/CBB001422428/)
Article
Dahye Jeong;
(2022)
Community Health by People’s Involvement: the Characteristics and Dilemma of Community Participation in Community Health Projects of the 1970-80s, Korea
(/isis/citation/CBB782355632/)
Article
DiMoia, John P.;
(2008)
“Let's Have the Proper Number of Children and Raise Them Well!”: Family Planning and Nation-Building in South Korea, 1961--1968
(/isis/citation/CBB000930701/)
Thesis
Kerry S. Shannon;
(2019)
Cleanliness and Civilization: Public Health and the Making of Modern Japan and Korea, 1868–1910
(/isis/citation/CBB333200630/)
Article
Sihn, Kyu-hwan;
(2013)
The Institutionalization of Pharmaceutical Administration after the Korean Liberation: Focusing on Regulating the Pharmaceutical Affairs Law (Yaksabeop) in 1953
(/isis/citation/CBB001214039/)
Article
Yeo, I. S.;
(2015)
U.S. Military Administration's Malaria Control Activities (1945--1948)
(/isis/citation/CBB001422433/)
Book
Brier, Jennifer;
(2009)
Infectious Ideas: U.S. Political Responses to the AIDS Crisis
(/isis/citation/CBB001200310/)
Book
Starr, Paul;
(2011)
Remedy and Reaction: The Peculiar American Struggle over Health Care Reform
(/isis/citation/CBB001214284/)
Article
Vieira de Campos, André Luiz;
(2005)
La expansión de la autoridad estatal y el Servicio Especial de Salud Pública en el Brasil, 1942--1960
(/isis/citation/CBB000651268/)
Article
Biehler, Dawn Day;
(2010)
Flies, Manure, and Window Screens: Medical Entomology and Environmental Reform in Early-Twentieth-Century US Cities
(/isis/citation/CBB001034154/)
Article
Dunn, Elizabeth Cullen;
(2011)
The Pasteurized State: Milk, Health and the Government of Risk
(/isis/citation/CBB001210133/)
Article
Kitchens, Carl;
(2013)
A Dam Problem: TVA's Fight against Malaria, 1926--1951
(/isis/citation/CBB001450377/)
Book
Irwin, Julia;
(2013)
Making the World Safe: The American Red Cross and a Nation's Humanitarian Awakening
(/isis/citation/CBB001212965/)
Book
Hoffman, Beatrix Rebecca;
(2012)
Health Care for Some: Rights and Rationing in the United States since 1930
(/isis/citation/CBB001214588/)
Book
Fairchild, Amy L.;
Bayer, Ronald;
Colgrove, James;
(2007)
Searching Eyes: Privacy, the State, and Disease Surveillance in America
(/isis/citation/CBB000953218/)
Article
Webb, James L. A., Jr.;
(2011)
The First Large-Scale Use of Synthetic Insecticide for Malaria Control in Tropical Africa: Lessons from Liberia, 1945--1962
(/isis/citation/CBB001034285/)
Article
Block, Daniel R.;
(2009)
Public Health, Cooperatives, Local Regulation, and the Development of Modern Milk Policy: The Chicago Milkshed, 1900--1940
(/isis/citation/CBB001034165/)
Book
Thomas, Karen Kruse;
(2011)
Deluxe Jim Crow: Civil Rights and American Health Policy, 1935--1954
(/isis/citation/CBB001251130/)
Thesis
Schwartz, Jason Lee;
(2012)
External Factors: Advisory Committees, Regulation, and American Public Health, 1962--1999
(/isis/citation/CBB001567388/)
Be the first to comment!